Background
During the mid-19th century the French term "confection" referred to ready-made unfitted or loosely fitted cloaks and outer garments, sold by purveyors of dry goods. This flowing coat, with its stylized out-scale rose motif, falls into this category. Its oversized repeat and percussive, jagged pattern evoke the bizarre silks of the early 18th century. Juxtaposed with a petal-pink brocade lapel facing, and trimmed with softly knife-pleated chiffon ruffles, all components meld to make this coat one of the sweetest, most feminine garments of the collection.
Description
Full, flaring from shoulders; floor-length, slight train; oversized notched lapels, double, standing Medici-style collar at back; long, wide sleeves with deep turned-back cuffs, white chiffon ruffles; puffed satin undersleeve, pink and white chiffon ruffles, pink and white ruched bands at wrist; V-shaped yoke, Watteau-style back; pink and white ruched chiffon and chiffon ruffles at yoke, collar, lapels, and center front.
Garment structure
Typical of Jean-Philippe’s designs for this period, this coat mixes historical metaphors, blending a raised 15th-century Medici-style collar with an 18th-century French Watteau-style back. Its boned standing collar can be worn both upright and framing the face, or falling. The back has a wide, dropped, lightly tucked pressed pleat which flares from the V of its yoke into a contained train. The long, wide sleeves are sewn into the cloak by hand. They have deep turned-back cuffs with white chiffon ruching and puffed satin undersleeves with pink and white pleated ruffles at the wrist.
Gift of Mrs. Robert D. Sterling, 1962.

Background
This gown provides yet another example of Jean-Philippe Worth’s enthusiastic approach toward designing for his large-scale clientele. Although it is devoid of its petersham and Worth signature, the gown’s floral motifs contribute to its attribution: they are identical to Michonet-produced embellishments depicted in a surviving Worth archival image dating to 1904. The gown waistband retains its ink-inscribed toile number—70588.
Description
Bodice: Boned, fitted, waist-length with center front rounded point; wide, square neck, chiffon underlayer, draped lace overlayer, ribbon at bust; elbow-length lace sleeves, applied allium blossoms, satin bow; band of brilliants at shoulders.
Skirt: Floor-length with train; chiffon with lace overlayer inset center front from knee to hem and at train; allium flower appliqués all around, knee to hem.
Garment structure
The asymmetrical bodice is cut off-grain and pleated and draped to fit. The lacing at center back is concealed by a lace panel at the top and a pleated drape at the waist edge. The elbow-length, 18th-century style sleeves overlay a layer of chiffon with one of embellished lace. Two rows of brilliants are applied across the shoulders in semblance of separate straps. The skirt is cut away below knee level and lace applied in a scalloped design and under laid by chiffon cut with the selvage at the hem edge.
Gift of Mrs. William Pollock, 1928.

Background
The stiff, heavy velvets and dense satins had waned in popularity by the time Worth approached the design of this grand ball gown. Here, a more flexible, lighter weight velvet provides the fluid backdrop for embellishment, allowing the fabric to be flow with the heavier silver lace and looped chenille. A popular sleeve treatment during this period combines a shoulder strap with a loose decorative flounce, revealing the upper arm—focusing on a new erogenous zone.
Description
Bodice: Boned, fitted, waist-length; diagonal lace panel over taffeta at bust, velvet draped at waist, curved at hem; square neck; short lace sleeves; silver lace edging at bust; three swags of fringe at upper arms; garland at left side extending over shoulder.
Skirt: Floor-length, flat in front, full in back extending into train; gathers and tucks at center front waist; pleats at back; silver lace and fringe swags at hem front; two tiers of lace applied at hem all around.
Garment structure
The gown’s closely fitted waist-length bodice features a diagonal lace panel over taffeta at the bust, a pleated velvet drape at the waist and a shallow curve at the hem. Scalloped metallic lace is applied below the cream lace. The short lace sleeves have three swags of fringe at upper arms with a large red and light pink rose garland on the left side extending over the shoulder. At the neck edge, the lace is stiffened with hairpin shaped stays to prevent the lace scallops from drooping. The stays are covered with narrow-gauge silk tubing.
The bodice back features a center-back lacing taffeta underbodice. The left back panel is covered with cream lace and extends beyond the center to hook at the right back. The lace, which is mounted on organza crosses the upper back and hooks into the right shoulder. The right back velvet panel crosses the back, draped to diminish in width, and fastens at the left underarm seam with a hook-and-eye closure. The floor-length skirt is flat in front and has stand-up darts either side of center front. Its very full back is pleated and gathered at the waist falling into a rounded, spreading train. The skirt front is trimmed with swags of the metallic lace and chenille fringe. Two rows of metallic lace are applied to the hem, including the train.
Worn by mother of donor.
Gift of Mrs. Harry T. Peters, 1956.

Background
This evening dress marks a stylistic transition from a 19th-century broken silhouette, created by separate bodice and straight-grained skirt panels, to a new continuous, flowing shape. Its sleek fit is achieved through the use of bias panels and accentuated through its execution in a single color. Worth here chooses a sparsely patterned, woven and velvet star brocade, which he monochromatically augments with the addition of applied velvet stars and crystal brilliants.
Description
Floor-length with train; fitted satin bodice, asymmetric front, mock wrap-and-tie at left waist, satin streamers with tassel ends, net insertions, applied brilliants and metallic cord, clear bead stars; wide square neck; short lace sleeves, satin ribbons at shoulders; full skirt, flat in front, small bustle in back.
Garment structure
The individual skirt sections of the trumpeting skirt are cut narrower at the top to reduce bulk at the waist. The scale of both woven silk and velvet stars graduates from small-scale near the waist line, to large-scale near the hem. To provide visual continuity, some of the larger velvet stars have been cut from yardage and applied to sparse sections. In other cases where the motifs fall on a seam, half of the star has been cut around, beyond the seam allowance, and applied over the adjoining seam line. The gown lacks its original skirt lining.
Gift of Mrs. George S. Amory, 1944.

Background
Worth here presents his take on the modern tailor-made suit by fusing its mannish jacket and matching contained skirt with the more feminine lines of a late-19th century gown. The slim upper skirt explodes at the hem into a cumbersome fullness.
Description
Jacket: Jacket and vest effect; below-hip length, fitted to waist; top-stitched pleats from waist to hem, mock jacket opening with curved pendants either side of center front; round, scalloped neck, taffeta edging extending into center back diamond-shaped appliqué; embroidered satin mock vest with round neck; full, double-box pleated sleeves, chevron-shaped top-stitching at elbow, curved wool and taffeta bands at wrist; top-stitched rose taffeta butterfly-shaped girdle; braid buttons on girdle and at wrists; applied tassels either side of center front; center front hook-and-eye closure; cream brocade lining.
Skirt: Floor-length, gored, box pleats falling from hip darts, chevron topstitching at knee: vertical looped bands of taffeta applied knee to hem; taffeta underskirt, accordion-pleated dust ruffle.
Garment structure
The butterfly-shaped taffeta girdle is machine-stitched with multiple rows of topstitching and covers the waist seam; braid-covered buttons are sewn on the ends. The full sleeves are pleated into two box pleats at the cuffs. Each of the pleats is embellished with a machine stitched chevron design at the elbow. The flared and pleated skirt of thigh-length jacket is unlined; the bodice and sleeves are lined with cream brocade woven with a carnation pattern.
The jacket’s flowing lines resolve into a flaring floor-length gored skirt. Echoing the details of the jacket, the skirt has chevron topstitching at the knee and bias strips applied from the knee to hem. The vertical bias trim has an oval above the same diamond shape used on the jacket back. The hem is topstitched by machine. The taffeta underskirt has an accordion-pleated dust ruffle.
Gift of Mrs. Laurance Rockefeller, 1981.

Background
In keeping with the design tradition of using the tea gown form as a vehicle for poetic imagery, this gown, designed for Mrs. Seth Low Pierrepont, is a picturesque medieval-style interpretation. The soft, organically derived tone of its velvet dramatically contrasts with the opulence of its gold lace. The very intricate padded, foliate-embroidery of its panels closely parallels the embroidery that was emblematic of Liberty of London, a leader in the design of clothing and artifacts of the Aesthetic movement.
Description
Dress: Princess line, floor-length; lace yoke, lace band collar; lace gigot sleeves, cuff ruffles, cord loop-and-button trim from elbow to wrist closure, cord tassels, cream chiffon undersleeve; skirt flat in front, full in back; bust-length gold lace tabard, silk tassels at sides.
Vest: Below-knee length; open center front, closed at sides to waist, extending into four open square-end panels; collarless; extended shoulders; passementerie at all edges.
Garment structure
This medieval-style tea gown comprises a full-length dress with a lace yoke, banded stand collar and sleeves, a gold lace tabard, and passementerie –embellished tabard vest. The dress has an empire waist with full-length princess seaming. Machine-made Alençon-style lace is used on the yoke and collar. Metal stays are inserted into a narrow casing on each side of center front to prevent the collar from collapsing,
Constructed of lace-over-chiffon, the gigot sleeves fasten at the wrist with cord-covered buttons and loops. The chiffon undersleeve is shorter than the lace outer layer, causing the shoulders to puff out without collapsing. Decorative gold corded balls and loops embellish the sleeves from the elbow to the wrist. The sleeves are trimmed with lace frills at the wrist and armhole.
Worn by donor.
Gift of Mrs. Seth Low Pierrepont, 1956.

Background
Replacing the house’s signature heavy satins and silks with filmy chiffons, Maison Worth’s early 20th-century designs nod to the new, less restrictive silhouette popularized by Paul Poiret. This high-waisted, tubular evening dress incorporates the use of shimmering brilliants diffused through transparencies to emphasize its ethereal quality.
Description
Tubular, floor-length; empire waist; chiffon over lace at bust, V-neck, brilliant bands; elbow-length chiffon sleeves, shirred at inner elbow; satin skirt, embroidery at knee and hem, wide, draped satin waistband; chiffon overskirt, cutaway hem at front with tassels at hem center font and center back; satin train falling from waist, embroidered at hem; cluster of silk flowers at left bust.
Garment structure
Although the dress is not tightly corseted, it is supported by a boned corselet, which is sewn into the bodice and ends just below the natural waist. The predominantly satin skirt has embroidered bands of cornflowers at the knee and hem levels, with a double-layer of chiffon on the front overskirt. A single layer of chiffon with two wide lace ruffles spills from beneath the satin skirt back. Small lead weights are enclosed within the hem allowance to insure proper drape. The edges of the chiffon ruffles are finished with Worth’s distinctive selvage edge. The train is a separate panel falling from the raised waist, it partial conceals the petal pink bead and brilliant tassels. The shirring at the top is surmounted by two brilliant-set bands. The train also conceals the center back closure.
Worn by the mother of the donor, Mrs. William Storrs Wells.
Gift of Mrs. Harry T. Peters, 1956.